Michael Davies

Writer, Musician, Actor

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THE POWER OF YES

Lyttelton Theatre, Royal National Theatre, until March 7, 2010

 

DAVID Hare sets his stall out from the off: this is not a play, he tells the audience.

And although the actor playing David Hare – the late-drafted but impeccable Anthony Calf – then backtracks a little, conceding that this is, as billed, a dramatist’s attempt to understand the financial crisis, he then proceeds to give us high drama dressed up in documentary clothing.

I hate to gainsay a playwright of such standing, but there is little doubt that actually this is a play. And it’s one of some force.

There is a clear narrative drive in the on-stage author’s pursuit of the origins, outworkings and effects of the past 12 months’ chaos in the banking world. Hare’s interviews with key players – recorded the old-fashioned journalistic way, with notebook and pen – carry additional weight through being genuine quotations, and the enlightening perspective they offer on what happened, how it happened and just who was to blame is more than enough to compensate for the jargon and obfuscation of the sources.

There’s more than a journalist’s mind at work in the crafting of the piece, however, and Hare shows real clarity in his peeling back of the complexities, juxtaposing revealing remarks and outrageously arrogant views to make his barbed political observations.

It’s been compared unfavourably by some with Enron, Rupert Goold’s musical extravaganza of that doomed financial disaster. This is both unfair and inaccurate. Like is not compared with like. Hare sets out to get to grips with an immense density of information and misinformation, and succeeds with clarity and considerable dramatic effect.

The production serves him well, too, with Angus Jackson’s straightforward direction on Bob Crowley’s no-nonsense set helping to focus in on the issues without ever becoming stodgy in the uninterrupted two hours.

Calf holds the thing together superbly, ranging from mystification to righteous fury in a well-judged performance. The huge supporting cast of mainly men in suits offers a diverse range of opinions that steer the right side of political dogma. There are some lovely touches of humour from the safe hands of Jeff Rawle, Malcolm Sinclair and Richard Cordery, while Claire Price provides some welcome female input in the guise of a Financial Times journalist energising Hare’s conscience.

It’s invigorating, thought-provoking and argumentative, and it’s as stimulating a response to the financial crisis as you’re likely to find on either bank of the Thames.

 

 

MADAME DE SADE

Wyndham’s Theatre until May 23, 2009

 

CRITICS can be such a critical bunch, can’t they? No sooner have they finished polishing their plaudits for Michael Grandage and his season of Donmar in the West End productions than they are reaching for the knives to butcher the latest of them.

Admittedly, Madame de Sade is not quite in the same league as the Ivanov or Twelfth Night which preceded it – and we can only wait with bated breath for Jude Law’s Hamlet later in the year – but the production hardly gives cause for the kind of savaging it has received at the hands of most of my national colleagues.

The truth is that there is much pleasure to be derived from the piece, and not just for those of the infamous Marquis’s persuasion.

On a handsome Christopher Oram set of decaying silver-leaf, the French aristocracy plunges blindly towards the revolution, its only concern the scandalous sexual misdemeanours of the aforementioned Marquis. Translated from Yukio Mishima’s 1965 Japanese original by Donald Keene, there are vast tracts of wordy, complex speech with little or no dramatic action to serve as respite.

But while this has been skewered as unwieldy stodge by some, it’s just as easy to see it as an opportunity for six fine actresses to wrench pathos and drama from some superficially unpromising material.

At the heart, of course, is Dame Judi Dench, who is imperious in her pomposity yet achingly vulnerable when her humanity and concern for her daughters is allowed to peep through.

Rosamund Pike and Fiona Button as the two daughters – one de Sade’s wife, the other his mistress – forge an unlikely double act in opposition to their old-school Mama, dredging the shamefulness of scandal to find a justification for standing by their man, no matter how flimsy.

And in Frances Barber and Deborah Findlay, there is another pairing – this time of wanton hussy with self-righteous puritan – that generates much entertaining and enlightening sparring. Jenny Galloway also turns in a nicely grumpy servant, Charlotte, whose turnaround in fortunes come the revolution is neatly underplayed but no less significant for that.

Mishima’s play may be dense, complex and ultimately too pat, but Grandage’s production looks sumptuous, sounds impeccable and features performances with the power to thrill. It certainly warrants this first West End outing and makes an entirely justifiable appearance in the Donmar’s highly fruitful repertoire.

 

 

PRIVATE LIVES

Hampstead Theatre until February 28, 2009

 

HAMPSTEAD Theatre’s 1962 revival of Noel Coward’s 1930 comedy proved the catalyst for a late return to popularity for the out-of-favour writer. So it’s fitting that this gem of a production should kick off the same theatre’s 50th anniversary season, celebrating a hit play from each decade of its existence.

Coward is too often written off as glib, dated and desperately unfashionable. On the evidence of Lucy Bailey’s faithful rendition of this beautifully crafted masterpiece, none of the above applies.

Its premise, of course, is the simultaneous honeymooning of former married couple Elyot and Amanda with their new spouses at a Deauville hotel. Faced with each other afresh on a moonlit balcony, their warring, passionate relationship sparks back to life and the rest of the play follows the fallout of their revived amour as they go to ground in Amanda’s Paris pied-a-terre.

Beautifully designed on a stage raised some ten feet into the air by Katrina Lindsay, the opening balcony scene neatly sidesteps the potential problems of a narrow strip of performance space by turning it into a widescreen cinematic letterbox, elegantly lit (Oliver Fenwick) and reminiscent of an ocean liner. The Paris apartment, too, is perfectly created, from the carefully scattered cushions to the baby grand piano.

But in the end, Coward is all in the playing, and director Bailey couldn’t have wished for a better troupe. As Elyot and Amanda, Jasper Britton and Claire Price fizz and sizzle with all the wicked fun Coward and Gertrude Lawrence themselves must have exuded.

Britton – not a classically handsome leading man – has bucketloads of charm and is easy to believe as the self-centred, hedonistic cynic who sees what he wants and goes after it with reckless abandon. Price, meanwhile, gives us an Amanda of equally dubious moral fibre, but an utterly convincing sense of duty overridden by passion. They look and sound fabulous together, whether snuggled in silk pyjamas or trading snipes in evening dress.

There’s great support, too, from Lucy Briggs-Owen and Rufus Wright as their new, cast-off spouses: both create characters who are more than simple ciphers for their centre-stage partners, and their contribution – particularly in the delightfully played closing scene – is vital to the show’s overall success.

It’s a winning, vibrant production that catches light from the word go and, like Elyot and Amanda, rarely lets up, whether it’s wrapping you in its arms or punching you on the nose.

 

 

TWELFTH NIGHT

Wyndham’s Theatre, London, until March 7, 2009.

 

THE Donmar’s year-long residency in the West End kicked off with a meaty production of Chekov’s Ivanov, with a thundering performance by Kenneth Branagh at its heart.

Now director Michael Grandage turns to pure comedy in his latest exploration of the classics, this time with another supreme talent at the centre.

Not that this lively, colourful version of Shakespeare’s whimsical bit of fluff depends overmuch on Sir Derek Jacobi. For, while the theatrical knight is indeed a tour de force as the mistreated Malvolio, this is a real ensemble performance with barely a foot adrift.

Grandage and his designer Christopher Oram have staged a beautifully crafted piece, with the marvellous sets and lighting (Neil Austin) at one moment conveying late-night cosiness, the next a sweeping, sunlit beach, all with virtually no set or props.

The actors are seamlessly choreographed into these spaces with a fluidity and naturalness that means the production never falters as it races through two and a bit neatly filleted hours of lightly-tripping delight.

Ron Cook is as loveable a rogue as I have seen in the role of Sir Toby Belch and he is elegantly offset by a drippy but affecting Guy Henry as Sir Andrew Aguecheek. This double act, complemented by an intelligent Maria from Samantha Spiro, is refreshingly entertaining, a million miles from the boorish drunks so often presented.

Indira Varma is gracefully cool as the countess Olivia, while Victoria Hamilton as the cross-dressing Viola never attempts to look overly boyish, but allows the characters around her to believe in her maleness, and this suspension of disbelief works as expertly as Sir Derek’s dissection of his role.

As you might expect, it’s immaculately spoken, perfectly timed and played with a straightness that draws out more laughs than any overacting could achieve. Some, as somebody once said, are born great.

With Dame Judi and Jude Law’s Hamlet still to come, Twelfth Night offers a wonderful staging post in this electrifying West End season.

 

 

THE WHITE DEVIL

Menier Chocolate Factory, London, until November 15, 2008.

 

WEBSTER’S dark study of greed, adultery and murder gets a visceral interpretation at the hands of director Jonathan Munby in a production that confronts its audience on so many levels.

For a start, in a traverse setting at the Menier Chocolate Factory, you’re never more than a few feet from the action, with spittle and blood bags in perpetual danger of spilling over from the narrow track of a stage.

But there’s real immediacy in the performances, too, with the stark, almost televisual close-ups exploited for maximum effect.

At the heart of the drama are the brother-and-sister nightmares of Flamineo and Vittoria, whose journey to damnation begins with a more-than-filial kiss and ends in a bloody, deathly embrace, by way of conspiracy, heresy and fratricide.

The male half of this demonic duo is played by Aidan McArdle, dolled up like a tart’s boudoir and sporting a foppish quiff. He makes a startling Iago figure, working his Machiavellian machinations on those around him with always another layer of subtext behind the eye shadow.

Claire Price, as his partner in many crimes, creates an utterly credible mixture of feminine fragility masking a blistering bitterness against the world and her lot. Between them, they not only hold the piece together but drive it inexorably and pacily to its violent conclusion.

Along the way, fine support comes from the likes of Darrell D’Silva as Vittoria’s powerful but easily led lover Bracciano, and Christopher Godwin as the hypocritical Cardinal Monticelso.

Webster’s scattergun approach and sub-Shakespearean dialogue are well marshalled by Munby and his cast, and with the help of a simple, ingenious set (Philip Whitcomb) and intelligent lighting (Hartley T A Kemp), the result is a production of verve and vibrancy that punches well above its off-West End weight.

 

 

SIX CHARACTERS IN SEARCH OF AN AUTHOR

Gielgud Theatre, London, until November 8, 2008.

 

THEY say Bach used to write some of his most sublime music purely as a mental exercise. There are moments in Rupert Goold’s new adaptation of Pirandello’s Six Characters that seem distinctly similar.

But while some of the cleverness of the piece has the feel of a technical divertissement for the director, there is no doubting the overall power of his magic touch.

With writer Ben Power, Goold has created much more than a play within a play – more an existential essay within a docu-drama within a play – and uses every trick, theatrical, televisual and filmic, to fool and subvert the audience’s expectations.

So at one point we see a ‘reality’ TV crew apparently rewinding a scene in their producer’s head, while at another, a hand-held video camera follows that same producer backstage, out into the theatre foyer and even next door into Les Miserables in full swing as Goold continues to play with his media.

There are smart lines and technical wizardry in abundance. Sometimes overly self-referential, the writers draw enormous mileage from cultural connections in the worlds of theatre and TV, exploiting and extending Pirandello’s ideas almost to breaking point.

Indeed, the Italian playwright himself puts in an appearance at one stage as the second half descends from tragedy, through farce, to unfathomable questioning in a breathless race to the un-endable finish.

Performances throughout are beautifully judged, from Ian McDiarmid’s classy, suspect Father desperately trying to retain authority as the various worlds disintegrate around him, to Denise Gough’s flaky, fiery Step-Daughter.

There’s great strength too among the supporting cast, with even minor characters playing pivotal roles in the unfolding melee and retaining a consistency of craziness in this inconsistent creation.

If it all falls apart a little at the end, that may be the combined fault – or perhaps intention – of both Pirandello and Goold. Either way, it’s a thought-provoking, mind-bending evening of humour and angst.

 

 

IVANOV

September 21, 2008

Wyndham’s Theatre, London, until November 29, 2008.

 

IT’S been claimed that the straight play is being steadily wiped out in the West End by a constant drip of jukebox musicals and celebrity-driven fluff.

   On the showing of this production, it ain’t giving up without a fight.

   The starter in a four-play, year-long cycle staged at the beautifully restored Wyndham’s under the banner of the Donmar, Ivanov is Chekhov’s first dramatic work, and went through a number of rewrites before it surfaced as a hit – and thus changed the course of Russian theatre.

   Now offered in a new version by Tom Stoppard, it’s revealed as a witty, gritty piece, perhaps lacking the subtlety of the better-known plays but still unquestionably Chekhov wrestling with the big stuff.

   Director Michael Grandage has assembled himself a vast and hugely talented ensemble – a theme that’s to be continued throughout the year – and this first production is headed nominally by Kenneth Branagh in the title role.

   Branagh, who has shown over the years that his extraordinary virtuosity is just at home on the big screen or the other side of the footlights, returns to the boards with a stunning characterisation of a man falling apart. He’s utterly believable, whether raging at his friends or lurching into miserable self-pity, and it’s a constant joy to watch this gifted master craftsman at work.

   But the piece is heavily dependent on the ensemble and there are delightful performances throughout, from Lorcan Cranitch’s boisterous drunk Borkin to Malcolm Sinclair’s penniless count Shabelsky. Gina McKee gives a delicately pained tubercular wife, while Tom Hiddleston is all youthful fire as her doctor, outraged at Ivanov’s callous treatment of her.

   There’s a wonderful performance, too, from Kevin R McNally as Ivanov’s friend and creditor Lebedev, whose 16-year-old daughter provides the catalyst for tragedy. McNally does comedy brilliantly, then turns on a sixpence to deliver anguished pathos, all of it wrapped up in a three-dimensional creation of depth and emotion.

   Christopher Oram’s atmospheric design, combined with judicious lighting (Paule Constable) and music (Adam Cook), add to the feeling of heat and claustrophobia in a withering Russian summer, while Grandage’s masterly direction keeps things rattling along to their dramatic conclusion with pace and style.

   It’s a terrific curtain-raiser on a highly tempting season, and a defiant rallying call for the West End straight play.